Here are a few tidbits that will eventually be incorporated into a more complete page on Bedouins and Pastoralism:
| The Bedouin By Frederick Engels Now the bell rings, and suddenly The silken curtain swift ascends. And all in hushed expectancy Wait for the evening to commence. No Kotzebue commands the scene To set the merry audience roaring. No Schiller of the earnest mien Steps forth, his golden words outpouring. Sons of the desert, proud and free, Walk on to greet us, face to face; But pride is vanished utterly, And freedom lost without a trace. They jump at money’s beck and call (As once that lad from dune to dune Bounded for joy). They're silent, all, Save one who sings a dirge-like tune. The audience, amazed and awed By what these acrobats can do, Applauds them, just as it applauds The trumperies of Kotzebue. |
Fleet nomads of the desert lands, You've braved the sun’s fierce noontide rays Through harsh Morocco’s burning sands, Through valleys where the date-palms sway. And through the garden paradise Of Bled-el-Djerid once you swept. You turned your wits to bold forays. Your steeds to battle proudly stepped. You sat there, where moon lustres spill By rare springs in a palm-tree grove, And lovely lips with gracious skill A fairy-story garland wove. Sleeping in narrow tents you lay In love’s warm arms, with dreams all round, Till sunrise ushered in the day And camels made their bellowing sound. They jump at money’s beck and call, And not at Nature’s primal urge. Their eyes are blank, they're silent, all, Except for one who sings a dirge. Written: in the first half of September 1838 First published: in the Bremisches Conversationsblatt No. 40, Sept. 16, 1838 Source: MECW Volume 2 Transcribed: Andy Blunden |
| Bedouin |
| SYLLABICATION: | Bed·ou·in |
| PRONUNCIATION: | d![]() - n, b d w n |
| VARIANT FORMS: | also Bed·u·in |
| NOUN: | Inflected forms: pl. Bedouin or Bed·ou·ins also Beduin or Be·du·ins An Arab of any of the nomadic tribes of the Arabian, Syrian, Nubian, or Sahara deserts. |
| ETYMOLOGY: | Middle English Bedoin, from Old French beduin, from Arabic bad w y n, pl. of badaw , nomadic, from badw, desert nomads, Bedouins. See bdw in Appendix II. |

The locations of the "home ranges" of the various Jordanian Bedu tribes in AD 1900

A similar map made in AD 1999. Notice how far some of the tribal homelands have moved in only 100 years.
Data, presentations, and information downloads
These are files I have developed and made myself.Ethnographic herd watering data table
Nomadic pastoralism Bibliography in PDF format
The Nomadic Bedouin Presentation
Human Animal Interactions and the Shift from Hunting to Herding
The Technology of Nomadic Pastoralists
"GIS and Pastoralists in Beidha, Southern Jordan"
Pastoralism and Bedouin Links
Organizations and General Pastoralism:Center for the Study of Eurasian Nomads
League for Pastoral Peoples
ODI Pastoral Development Network Papers
Oxfam - Pastoralism - Introduction
Beduin of the Negev - CAABU
Patterns of Subsistence: Pastoralism
Traditional Nomadic Pastoralism
Bedouin and Bedouin Crafts:
Welcome to the World of Beduin Weaving
Ammarin Bedouin Camp
Sinai Beduines
Reflections on Sinai Bedouin Women
Photographic exhibit - the Bedouin
The Bedouin
La Beduina Tours - Bedouin Traditions
Libyan Beouin Society
Bedouin people of the Israel's Negev desert Photo Gallery by Eyal Dor-Ofer at pbase.com
Bedouin Shamanism (Fuqara)
National Geographic MapMachine: Student Atlas - Bedouin Photo, Map, History
The Bedouin in Israel
Tuareg:
Tuareg People
Tuareg, Tuaregs culture and history - Touareg, Touaregs, culture et histoire
Central Asian Nomads:
Nomads of the Steppe
Central-Asian Nomads Unite!
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